Tennis in Sitges
Sitges is a great base for racquet sports: plenty of sun, sea-level conditions (easy on the lungs), and a growing padel scene alongside classic tennis. Here’s a practical guide to get you on court—whether you’re after a casual hit, coaching, or match play.
Where to Play (types of venues)
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Tennis clubs (members & visitors): The town’s main tennis club(s) typically offer hard or artificial grass courts, lights, coaching, stringing, and a bar/terrace. Most welcome non-members with a visitor court fee and advance booking.
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Municipal sports centers: Public multi-sport facilities often have bookable outdoor hard courts at budget rates. Expect simple amenities; bring your own balls.
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Hotels & resorts: A few hotels in/near Sitges have guest-only courts (sometimes rentable to non-guests off-peak). Good for a quick hit if you’re staying on site.
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Nearby towns (10–20 min): Vilanova i la Geltrú, Sant Pere de Ribes, and other neighbors have additional clubs—useful if Sitges times are full.
Tip: In Spain, many venues manage both tennis and padel. If you don’t immediately see “tennis,” check the venue’s sport list or call—courts can be listed under a general “raqueta” category.
Booking your court
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Apps: In Catalonia, Playtomic is widely used (especially for padel, but many clubs list tennis, too). Create an account, set location = Sitges, filter by tennis.
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Direct contact: Clubs still take bookings by WhatsApp/phone. Ask for: surface, lighting fee, visitor rate, and racket/ball rental.
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When to book: Weekday mornings are easiest. Evenings (19:00–21:30) and weekend mornings fill up—book 24–72 h ahead in high season.
Coaching, stringing & hitting partners
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Private lessons: Most clubs have federated coaches offering 1:1 or small-group sessions. Typical lesson blocks: 60 or 90 minutes.
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Hitting partners / match play: Ask the club office about level-based mixers or a WhatsApp group for visiting players.
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Stringing: Larger clubs can string within 24–48 h; bring your usual strings if you’re picky.
Padel (because you’ll see it everywhere)
Padel is huge in Spain, and Sitges is no exception. If tennis courts are tight, consider:
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Padel taster: Easy learning curve; 60–90 minutes with friends is plenty to get hooked.
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Socials & Americano formats: Rotating-partner events—great for meeting locals.
Surfaces & conditions
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Common surfaces: Outdoor hard or artificial grass for tennis; artificial turf for padel.
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Wind: A light sea breeze is normal. Aim for morning sessions for calmer air.
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Heat: July–August can be hot—book early morning or after 19:00. Many courts have lights.
Expected costs (typical ranges)
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Public/municipal courts: ~€8–€18 per hour (day), add €2–€6 for lights.
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Club visitor rate: ~€14–€30 per hour depending on surface/slot; lessons ~€35–€70/hour.
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Rentals: Racket €3–€6; ball can (~€6) if you’re buying.
What to pack (besides your racket)
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Light, breathable kit + hat and sunscreen (reef-safe if you’ll swim after).
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Non-marking shoes (hard courts can be strict).
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Water & electrolytes—refill stations aren’t guaranteed at municipal sites.
Sample “tennis day” in Sitges
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08:00–09:30 Morning hit (calm winds, cooler temps).
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10:00 Coffee & croissant in the old town; quick sea dip at Sant Sebastià.
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13:30 Lunch (try xató or seafood rice).
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19:30–21:00 Match play under lights; post-session vermut or cava on the promenade.
Family & juniors
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Many clubs run kids’ clinics and holiday camps (Easter/summer).
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Ask for mini-nets, red/orange/green balls for younger players.
Finding specific venues
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Search “tennis Sitges” or “club tennis Sitges” on Google Maps / Playtomic for the closest options.
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If everything’s full, widen to Vilanova i la Geltrú or Sant Pere de Ribes (10–15 minutes by car/taxi).